The Latest
- Discover how the biblical concept behind the "spirit of the commander" helps explain today's most significant cultural shifts.
- Learn why seemingly unrelated stories about life, religious freedom, and truth reveal a common pattern beneath the headlines.
- Explore how biblical convictions are increasingly treated as unacceptable in public life across parts of the Western world.
- See why Christians are called to exercise discernment and remain faithful even as culture quietly moves away from biblical truth.
Every culture is shaped by something deeper than laws, elections, or headlines. Long before policies change, people begin to sense which ideas are celebrated, which beliefs are tolerated, and which convictions carry a cost. That quiet shift is what the Israeli military calls ruach hamefaked, or "the spirit of the commander." As discussed on The Daniel Cohen Show, it describes a culture where no explicit order is necessary because everyone already understands the direction they are expected to follow. That same principle helps explain many of today's most troubling headlines, from attacks on biblical truth to growing hostility toward religious freedom. Watch more biblical news and cultural analysis anytime on Real Life Network.
The Orders No One Has to Give
Healthy organizations often function without constant instruction.
A trusted leader establishes a culture so clearly that those under his authority instinctively know how to act. They understand not only the rules, but also the values behind them. Cultures operate the same way. People learn what is acceptable long before anyone puts it in writing.
That reality is evident in one of the episode's most disturbing stories. An Ontario surrogate mother was asked to abort an otherwise healthy baby because an ultrasound revealed a cleft lip, a condition that is routinely corrected through surgery after birth. When she refused, the intended parents sued her.
No government ordered that lawsuit. No public official instructed anyone to treat a child as a product that could be rejected because of a cosmetic condition. Yet the cultural expectation already existed.
The child was no longer viewed primarily as a gift bearing the image of God. Instead, the pregnancy became a contract, and the baby became something that could be evaluated against personal expectations.
The same pattern appeared in testimony before Congress, where a medical school leader struggled to affirm the simple biological reality that women become pregnant. Future physicians are increasingly taught language designed to accommodate ideology rather than objective truth.
Again, no one had to issue a formal command. Everyone already understood which answers would be rewarded and which ones would invite criticism.
The most powerful cultural changes often happen without anyone ever giving an explicit order.
When Truth Becomes the Enemy
As the episode unfolded, stories that initially seemed unrelated revealed a common thread.
In New York City, historic churches have suffered repeated fires while public silence has raised questions about whether attacks on Christian institutions receive the same urgency as attacks on other communities.
Across the Atlantic, Finnish parliament member Päivi Räsänen continues facing consequences for publicly expressing a biblical view of marriage and sexuality. Her conviction for "hate speech" stemmed from quoting Scripture and defending long-held Christian doctrine. She was later barred from traveling through the United Kingdom because of that conviction.
The details differ. The underlying pattern does not. Increasingly, biblical convictions are treated not simply as beliefs that others reject, but as beliefs that society considers dangerous. That shift matters. Freedom of religion has never meant merely holding private opinions. It has always included the freedom to live consistently with those convictions in public life.
A society begins to lose its freedom when speaking the truth becomes more controversial than abandoning it.
Readers looking for more biblical analysis of today's cultural issues can explore additional programming on Real Life Network.
Every Culture Reflects the Spirit It Serves
Headlines come and go. Political leaders rise and fall. Court decisions are appealed.
But beneath every cultural controversy lies a deeper spiritual question. What spirit is shaping the culture?
Jesus consistently taught that outward actions flow from inward realities. Nations are no different. The values a society celebrates eventually become the values it protects, while the truths it rejects gradually disappear from public life. That process rarely happens all at once. It happens one compromise at a time.
One redefined word. One ignored act of violence. One silenced conviction. One generation that learns certain truths are simply too costly to say aloud. That is why discernment matters so much.
Christians are not called to panic every time a troubling headline appears. Neither are they called to ignore the direction of the culture around them. They are called to recognize the spiritual currents beneath the headlines and remain faithful regardless of where those currents may lead.
Every culture eventually reflects the spirit it chooses to follow.
The greatest question facing Christians today is not simply what the next headline will be.
It is whether God's people will continue to follow the truth even when the culture quietly begins moving in another direction.
Watch the full discussion on The Daniel Cohen Show and discover more biblical news and cultural commentary on Real Life Network.
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Daniel Cohen hosts the "Daniel Cohen Show" exclusively on the Real Life Network. A Jewish follower of Jesus and three-time Emmy award-winning journalist, Cohen delivers the news from Israel, reporting on today's top headlines with a biblical worldview.




